Chamber Music Concert Filharmonia Narodowa

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Chamber Music Concert
Equilibrium String Quartet, photo: Maciej Mulawa

A frenzy of cataloguing gripped composers of the Romantic era, who painstakingly gave opus numbers to their works – at least those that made it out of their desk or drawer. After their death, there were even people who persistently (usually in a self-interested manner) catalogued the output often deliberately left unsigned. Thus Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy’s graceful Capriccio in E minor was combined in the posthumous opus 81 with three more of his works for string quartet. Today, it is often performed as a stand-alone composition.

Beethoven’s example shows that the order of opuses and numbers does not always reflect the chronology of composition. His ‘classical’ String Quartets, Op. 18 – dialoguing with the masterpieces of Mozart and Haydn – were published, in books of three, in a different order than they were composed. Satisfied (rightly so) with his work, the composer decided to place the somewhat sombre Quartet No. 4 at the beginning of the second book, although the numbering does not reflect the order in which the works were composed.

As for the 31-year-old Juliusz Zarębski, he was concerned not about how his Piano Quintet in G minor would be published, but whether anyone would want to publish it at all. Wonderfully received by the critics, dedicated to Franz Liszt, this masterpiece of nineteenth-century Polish chamber music was written in 1885 – just a few months before the young piano virtuoso’s death. The concern did not prove unfounded: the Quintet did not appear in print until the inter-war period.

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Małgorzata Malke

Małgorzata Malke graduated from the Academy of Music in Katowice in the class of Adam Musialski (violin) and Martyna Pastuszka (Baroque violin). She also studied at the universities of music in Graz (violin) and Vienna (performance practice) under Dominika Falger. She collaborates with Le Cercle de l’Harmonie, Collegium Marianum, {oh!} Orkiestra, Arte dei Suonatori, Wrocław Baroque Orchestra, as well as with cellist Bartosz Kokosza and harpsichordist Marcin Świątkiewicz. For ten years, she was a member of the Extempore trio, with which she recorded the album Telemann: Solos & Trios (2018). She plays the 1719 Claude Pierray violin. She is the recipient of a scholarship from the Minister of Culture and National Heritage. Her first solo album (2022) contains Georg Philipp Telemann’s 12 fantasies for solo violin. She is a teacher of the Suzuki method.

 

[2024]

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